Orange Daily Leader (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 15, No. 73, Ed. 1 Tuesday, March 25, 1919 Page: 1 of 6
six pages : ill. ; page 20 x 16 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
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4
*
J
Orarge Aatly #iraher
HAVE YOU NOTICED
t
s
THE WEATHER
+
VOLUME NUMBER XV.
NUMBER 73
IRISH CRISIS IN
e
*
A
0
d
co
a part pf the Second Division and sent
ing order of things Is rampant
nition
exhausted. Following this are 'out of touch with the times. He is
Me)
ing the American soldier
on the head solutely.suicidal.
(called
tater W. Hr Hornbrook, of Oregon; said he Europe the Spartacans believe.
took was in favor of “a greater degree or
escort
ammunition and strengthening his
0
HAND IS NEEDED
a
A)
for R. C. Murray, of New Hampshire.
F. E. Luckett, n Jefferson City, Mo., •
the i
ptured doc. 1 lawyer, wrote:
ers, teachers and business men grnrr-
Demonstration: Shout
that the ambulance men and stretcher
a
A
bearers were aided by
“Down With England
still
, t
Al-
*
"Down with Engk
REED COMES HIGH
,ATTW
4
Michie Say*
1
GIVEN CROSS OF HONOR
them.
ary 22nd, they arrived with a < asid the < onfe ren < of the big te n The
ference favors the settlement of the
$
4
COMt
0
A(RO$:
2
PLAN TO LAUNCH
REVOLUTION 00
OR ABOUT APRILI
FIGHI TO DEFEAT
CURKHS LEADER
GROWING BITTER
OUT Of 122 MEN
IS SOME RECORD
• lov e
under
Private Allen Walker, the first Or-
ange soldirr to return home who had
this dreudnaught Idaho, the largest fighting
ship afloat, went into commission as
■
put on board a train with a
guard and was carried from .i
want violence and t ie S»artacans do
The Spartacans recently sent a dele-
■
Mrause river in the Argonne sector.
He had just come back into the village
nt l o’cloek in the afternoon and had
unloaded his ambulance at the field
socialist, has been sent to Moarow by
Count von Broekdorf Rantzan, the Ger
man foreign minister, to equire into
the question of eloser relntions between
Germany and the oviet government.
arm- I
: -
i -
t,
ly
he
and Independent Operators
May Soon Be Called Off
far several days at what had been the i
French village of Sommepy,
Martin "got his" on November 10, |
Largest Fighting Ship
Goes Into Commission
THIS MAY PROVE
THE QUICKEST WAY
Arizona’s 8-Hour Dav
For Women Upheld
By Supreme Court
That More People Ars Advertising in
The Leader Every Dayr
min fortune, seven Germans surround- reaetionary and cannot get over his de.
ed the two helpless men, with fixed feat for nomination for preseident. To
bayonets. After unmercifully hammer- place him as leader now would be ab-
■
5
■
VF AC PFIPF
■ I La VV H U I LNUL rison, IN, confessed she poisoned M
Tonight and Wednesday showers, fresh
to strong southerly winds.
’ also to speak, w ill be unable to do so
on account of having a sore throat. In-
supply station, he had just drawn up
in frant of the building when a high
explosive shell struck the building On-
ly two of eight men who were either in
the building or standing in the street
sure
tion.
waz, m uch the same as the patriots o4
America did in 1776.
-o---------—
give a dog, and I have no
Also, it is more or less openly stated
Election of officers is expected to
put the finishing touch on the A men
i ran Petroleum Institute, which is said
Before entering the army Martin |
was employed by one of the largest Ex-Emperor Charles and
lumber ™»P~dr. f TewM. . ( Family Go to Switzerland
“A large number of Democrats in
’this state think Mr. Clark has outlived.
(By United Press.)
l’aris March 25 Ainrrica
"" 11 Per Cent of People of
were welling for twenty dollars
morning.
H-rs told the Ger...... peple lh. Ber|iner» Stage Hostile
allies hati comnt ' the , m . e,
The American boy was held prison stration “agaist the violation of Ger-
er until Decemher 2nd. and was then man territory under the peace treaty"
by a bit of shell which tore away a j
part of the bone. The cancussion hurt- UNIVERSITY STUDENT
army is near-
j Paris, March 23.—The question of
the barrier which the peace conference
intended to erect against the spread of
ALLIED TROOPS TO BE
RUSHED TO HUNGARY
a meeting tonight ade will be one of the most potent
ina to a dugout and fromna there to a haryony between the Democrat ie mem
ospitak, which Pvt W Uki r declares l ers of both houses and the exeeutive senal for the coming struggle.
was more like a livery stable, ‘branch of the government.’*
terms and he declares that the Ger-
uans were highly delighted ane threw
their hats in the air shouting joyous-
ly.
with a hand grenade
M. C. A.
(By Uni
ansas City, Mi
complete today foy
at which Senator I
the Independent Oil Men's Association ami ■ . -
the American Petroleum, league, to । Petrograd Die in February
cars whose owners could not find gar-
ages were once parked throughout the
residence sectiqn, ch a sight is now.
; from Camp Travis.
Steamer Oneida Is on
who has been direeting the campaign in almost every move that »
in Texas for a reduction of the cotton all partie. nut iminedietely conneeted
acreage, will review the work accom- with the governmental affair,.
“Ami don't forget the Hril < ross," derse his
faction with the government and "" R EKIN D E -RE 5
made by I ,
or who had bren previousiy minister- ■
ing to the British, he managed
an invasion of Germany to in-
the success of the new revolu-
peints..
It was on this front Martin
j ompany on board the f S. S. Ori-
Ou July 19, the division was moved
to Soissons in time to get into action
(By United Prass.)
Paris, March 25. Commissions
advising today the abandonment
Nosk is massing
saia. i ally and the congress expeets a large
attendance.
offensive has
that the Hinn Fein parliament, com
posed of 72 members who were elect
ed by Hinn Fein votes to the. British
house of commons, will hold its seeond
meeting at the Mansion House during
the present week.
But for the imperial ive need of the
premier’s attendance at the peace con-
ference, it is almost certain that the
Irish question would have been taken
up for settlement long hefore this.
1 But as soon as Lloyd George can safe
ly leave Paris, and labor troubles are
out of the way for the moment the
Irish question, will probably get the at-
tion of parliament.
Perhaps the most populnr plan heard
of for settlement of the question is to
make the island an Irish republic en
put In on the Verdun sector, where
the company stayed from March IS to
May 14. At the latter time the divis-
vol«rumct has wirrlessed the foreign
minister of the. new Jurarian govern
mient apprising him of the Bolshevik
sitution, acearding to advices.
fchiteherin said in. his wireless:
“Field Marshal Hindenburrr is ad-
sourens. The Bolshevik, however, are
within 100 miles of the eastern frontier
of Galicia, but reports late last week
were to the effeet that antjBol-hevik
there, packages with We now. endorse his conscript convict vancing on Kovno,
nttitude toward President
We did not at the time, nor do
d Press)
eh 23 Plans
his usefulness in congress. and over-
whelming majority of them do not en-
, C <, LOOKS LIKE IRON
were •• G, % raw ;
the day before the signing of the
istice while at Benumont, near
Ukranians were driving the Bolshevik
back in the region of (hr Pripet marshs
northeast of Lemberg, which the Poles
were forced to give up to the Ukraninns.
The sudden emergeney in Hungary of
a strong Bohevist regime is the fruit
fnl restfl t of the agitator Karl Radek’s
many week sof work among the the pov-
erty stricken people of Hungary, ac-
cording to a statement made to the
press.
' -Washington, March 25.—-The start
| of the trans-Atlantic flight to be un-
dertaken by navy seaplanes will be •
. made from Rockaway Beach, Long Is-
land. The machines will steer a course
j up the Atlantic coast to a point yet to
lie determined, from which they will
set sail overseas.
rd him more than 20 feet away, land-
ing him up against a wall. He was
picked up and sent to Field hospital
No. 1 at Sommethau, being moved
Paris, March 25. During February
more than 113,000 persons or about 11
per cent of the entire population, died
in Petrograd, according to Russian po-
lice statisties, just receiyed in Paris,
On February 1, the total population
of Petrograd was 900,000. In addition
to the deaths during the month 77,000
Bolshevism into the former central
and Furopean powers, has come sharply
to the front as a result of the situation
.. an expert on toil fertility. eleeted president of the Bina Fein re
of Shreveport, La., will ilisutrate hi. 1 publie, and whoj has been in hiding .Inee
hulance driver, often on duty M hours address on faetors influeneing farm hin escape fpman English jail, will re
profits with a series of charts, show turn openly to Dublin, where he will
Tehitcherin, of the Russian Soviet
gether with the burying of the hatch- !
rt betwcen the Standard Oil company
and the independents, were said Mon-
day to be among the most important
matters t come before the National
Petroleum congreas, which convenrs
here Tuesday
ne Ger- the residence of President Fbert. After lird troops will be rushed to lungary
ing anil grimacing at the symhol of i
the country which had conquered
hospital. Being sent to the medical
on the streets either. Where motor;
plished, not only in Texas, but in all of It has been announced that tomorrow
ion moved up to Chateau Thierry Mar- the cotton growing states. Prof. J. C (Wednsday) Prof. De Valera who was
tin was a litter bearer for 14 days, | Pridmor, 1 ---da-t -h- e:— F-- —
after which time he was made an am-
tirely independent and outside the Eng
Hah empire. For the sake of that idea
a number of men have already given up
their lives on the altar of freedom.
And there is hardly room for doubt
but that a number of men are now ready
to saerifiee, their lives.
This, however .is a matter for the ready to advance into Hungary,
Irish themselves to settle in their ownlack confirmation from unreliable
American relief workers who left
Moscow February 12, say that deaths
in that city early in February* averag-
ed 4,000 daily. They say mmliti.ms
there were similar tn those in Petro- l
grad where small pox, typhus, starva- |
ceived machine gun bullet in his Washington, March 25.—The Dem The Spartacans plan to strike with.
E i ' "5 the renult of hin going ocratie reorganization committee hart out warning and are now gatherin,
dotshbos farther than ade publia the letters from several weapons, munitions and food. Some of
' । HPPOs to F°, and eonse- Democratic National Committeemen en- the Spartacans are in favor of poet
dtel I-C12K under cross fire of dorsing (he fight to defeat i 'ha tup Clark : poning the revolution until after the
for minority leader in the house of the > Soviet congress of workmen and- in-
W‘ lie from gas and loss of blood, he next congres. dependent socialists, but this is meet,
a} in a sheli hole with a Mexican, un- j "I am satisfied that unless leadership ing little favor at the workmen do not
1 able to drug himself back to the is had in the house, the Democratic or-
part of the I nited States navy at
L'eruden, N. J.» today.
It probably will be a week hefore
the,ship will proceed to the f'hilade- .
, pbi i navy, yard and tlience tn New
lerk for addi tonal hsachinery equip-
nt i War Between Standard Oil
""".....—ORANGE SOLDIER AsaTowna War
B. Amidon, of
them." There, however,
mnedlical treatment of a ।
Austin, Texas, Marek M—Leslie F.; tion and the hunger plague were rang I
. . . .. . -____ .Eiter, a former student ot the Univer- ing unchecked Cffins were ne longer
itenato evocuation or base hospital at IM •r Tnu. whose home to in Sler- | sold in Moscow, but are only rented
Exermont, Beaune and .Savernay he-man, has been cited for bravery and for use nt funerals.
fore being returned to this country. , a . .. [.__ . , , m
* t " awarded the French Cross of Honor 0
oTheincondsdivisign m nt r,.,J' He ,r” the university and went to Getting Back to aPeace Basis
oners in auouon to orncers, as ., . .. -1 . . • .
. , . ... Paris, France, Where be enlisted in the -----L-
well at capturing 1,350 machine guns j _. ...... f '
x"™''r to the ametican...... Eting “ ” ■ —
"Theshen wtich wounded Martin nisomedal wan uwerded for personal brav- Lnforms are daily becoming more
killed his “buddy.” <WbtO. . firstline, trenshe seatce on the streets and in public
terrine barrage fire from 'theiplaces.
" Alen j cStPoh >ln» the battle of Argonne Fenet There are not so many automobiles
alo wounded G. J. ChmS. .1 Altoonn and taking out wounded alll,,| sol-
Pa, who was on duty at the meslical diera
supply depot struck by the shell.
sent to Ordroff where he was keptanti-Clark movement
or five weeks, enduring treatment ■ fer, of Florida; R.
merican lines. With him hr had hisganization w ill go to pieces, '' wrote
Browning machine gun which hr used John G. Evans .of South Carolina,
to keep off the enemy until his ammu-’Champ Clark is too old and his ideas
Camp Travis Texas, March 25. To !
have been a member a company
which had 116 easualties out of a to-
total of 122 men ami to have spent 14
months overseas either as litter bearer
or ambulance driver during sowe of '
the hottest of the fighting which the
American troops put in was the ex- I i
perience of Private First Class Rufus ,
A Martin, First Ambulance Company,
enee in the interest of a speedy settle-
muent h% President Wilwon, Pwmiers
Lloyd George, Clemeneeau and Orlan-
D L rut N. • CT do, with the Japanese and others call- Washington. March 25. -Constitu- ,
Kocks (Hf Miami Ha. es in when questins dirertiy r effeet- tiogalit, ar the Arizona act of 1918
-- iag them are discussed. y (unieing employmrnt of women to
Washington, March 25 The steam- The big four hold meltings everyjerge Jwours a day was upheld today
r Oneida of the shipping beard fleet, .day, making constant sessions The H ibe supreme court in disposing or
» is ashore on the roeks at the govern- confereuce of the big ten is a combi- appeals in which the act was attacked
intent cut near Miami, Fla. The navi nation of Abe premiers and foreign on ihe ground that it dcrimin«ted
department announced tollay that nai v ministers of England, France, Italy, aciccen the employment of waitresses ’ gaog
‛ueb had been sent from Key West Japan and President Winon and See- Tn roilroad restaurahts and otter res nan
ie na*1 the steamer. . Iretarycof state Lansing. leanfants. " 0042602
tzaba and was diseharged March 19 problem, nt the peace confer
Seenor Wm. K. Borah,
ORANGE, TEXAS. TUESDAY, MARCH 25, 1919
ig the importance .,t maintaining sotl be tnet by the Lord Mayor and
fertility. The Hon C. <>. I ane ,, a Jed the M.n.mn House.
there. After spending Mme eight day, member of the Texas Legislature, wi
W---.............................—.......... 1
uowest, I Mbit toD-
•an, SUf i vov NINT k
MAVIN NOUR puINfNG \
oom MEaE, • JEsT weM
vovo ASK eOMEBOD wuo
IV, ABOUT waA ue-
1INK OF OUO WoRK AND
OUR GewwcE. IF •o• DO'
\ wuu HANE ANOMER
new CUsTOMEAT
German women gathered round, sneere league of nations, will speak.
Then the wounded doughboy was ' Other qommittecmen endorsing the
i. Hungar, where the Bol-hevik elo- mashers 1, the Americans they
ments have seiezd power ami deelared,
that a stale of war exists between Hun •
gary an dthe entente allies.
Premiers of the alliell states were
railed to meet in speciul sexsion in Paris
at 3:00 o’cloek yesterday afterpoon, and
it was reported that important military
decisions might be taken regaring the
situation in Hungary and Poland.
The .laris newspapers see the situs
tion as various and as one railing for
prompt militar yaction. They express
the blief that'Germany may be behind
the movement for the purpose of de
feating the work of the peace confer
Chicago, March 25. — Merger of
(By United Press.)
Paris, March 25 Foreign Minister
state, will take part. Judge W F. ,
oereaheniling a. December s. 191T. Ramsey, nf the Federal Reerve Bank,the existi
The first overseas training work was
HE CASUAtTIES From Rockaway Beach
Amsterdam. March 25 A demon-
"Cieneral Deniken is being driven
northward by the Bolsheviki."
bucho' (much) eats arrived from the spevceh. If your committee entrusts "The Poles “have taken Baranovitch
Ied ( ross anil w» surely thought they the leadership of the minority of the and are now marching on Vilna and
a rare one. 2 >
Theaters formerly were sold out
The conference•Treply impressed
I l>» the collapse of the ihhprariai gov-
_ ernment and the ailiance wlhthe Rus-
DOLLARS - it Bolsheviki to declare wW\«g“in*t
LONDON, Mareh'25—The next few
weeks are lkely to be Will of import “I with Ruth every tine her heart
'for Ireland.- I beat." Stra told " reporter Just be- , hern taken prisoner be ttv Germans is
fore he left. I Im- prisoner had noth-l)e, ...... .0 .
There to a chance, however remote, ing to sny regarding nis dcnd wife lavE, Si" S , "an
that Lloyd Oeorge may denide to put Miss Garrison, against whon „ Jhn walker Mho resi, ien MisFarm
the Irish question before the peace con- .charge of murder has bren placed, was ahout six mites out or tlzis eit,
ference for settlement. confined today in the county deten- . ‘
tion home Walker was a mrudwr of (a.
The Irish of eourse, are hoping and F, Hist Infantry of the 36th division
spraying for one word to the effect tnat j ° land was on the front from October z
2nd Division. Martin han just been
brought back to the Fort Sam Hous-
ton Base Hospital for convalescence.
His company was the oldest ambu-
lance company in the army.
Martin enlisted from Jaeksonvilje,
Texas, on May 1y, 1917, and was sent
to Fort Bliss, Texes, where the com-
pany was in training until it was made
the entente Every effort is beingmade
i io sperd the peace settlement anhjs
be lieved that the lifting of the bioek
outside escaped death or serious
wound.. Martin, who w« about 20 hr the medinm formed to amalgn 1 I. the population was about s00,000.
feet from where the shell struck, ... mate formerly hostile interests,
hit in the left leg just above thie ankle
By FRANK J. TAYLOR
(United Press Staff Correspondent)
Berlin, March 25. — The Spartieany
bare planning to launch their third rev-
olution before April 1st.'It is intended e
tq be a signal for a general Bolshevik
uprising in Central urope The Rus-
sian Bolsheviki have been asked to
young soldier enjoyed the luxury of j
five days in a first class hotel. On the*
fifth day, an American ambulance wth
an American flag flying, drove up be-
fore the hotel to carry fhe American !
hoys away. While the ambulanere
Report* that the Russtan Bolshvik
had large forges of troops in Gallcin
Six towns, inluding Bapnume, fell
to the (it rmnans.
Serretary of War Baker presentea
to King Gtrre atluckinghau palnce.
Great Gierman drive resulted in loss
lo Aifies of 45,000 men nd 6oo guns.
—aiu^Uatr and heuvs to prevent the Bol-
shevikifromr-uktaining a foothold
ran prisoners, so at this place the * them for British and about r<j^
mhan city to another picking up more ,
American prisoners at rash place. At 1
Frankfort the Red Cross had senti
funds to pay the expenses of Amr ri- !
in a "quiet "sector in the Lorraine, the present the subject of good roads, and
ambulance company was sent on Sep- give the reasons why ’Trias shoutd
tember 12, to St Mihiel, spending support the proposition to issue $t5,-
right day* there during the fighting 000,000 in bonds for constructing good
at that salient. After this, the sy stem roads throughout the state. Mr. Lancy
was changed and the regimental and I will ekplnin the method by which these
field dressing stations gave way to am- roads are to be built at no additional
Ind anew drelsing stations, making the j increase in Use*. Prof P. G. Holden
wort of the ambalance drivers some is well known in Texas as hr conduct-
what easier. ed a profitable farming campaign in
From St Mihiel, the company was j a number of counties in 1915. He
sent to the Champagne front on Or- will advocate the teaching of practical '
tber 9, where the easualties handled 1 agriculture in the rural schoodls and
were almost as heavy as at Chateaucommunity organizations
Thierry and Balleau Wood, and where schpol betterment It is probabl
there were many prisoners eared for|the educational organ las t ions of the
among the wounded. These heavy cas- state will extend an invitation to Prof,
ualties were due to the fact that this Holden to conduct a campaign in.the
sector was on the old Hindenburg line, near future for community betterment
and the Huns bod more artillery and,The program should appeal to bank-
machine guns than they had at other ; ers, teachers and business men.
to October 10th on which dy he re-
yrs to Rastatt wherr they discarded )
their prison uniforms of Mark with
yellow bands around the left sleeve
and yellow stripes down the sides of1
-the pants. They were given the Ameri-
can soldier uniforms here and soon
I were journeying toward France.
Nancy, Tout soil Bloise were among 1
the cities passed through in France on
their way to Bordenux where they rm- ‘
barked on February 12th. On Febru-
- -e WA5 PRISONER
MEET NEARS --AMONG THEHUNS
, Storrs at Okanogon and posed as his ______
The ambulance carried the prison- l dicativ e of the eoming arraignment of
persona left Petrograd ami on March
were the finest folks orr" , next eongress to some other man than 'Minsk.
When the rmistice « ix signed, Pvt. Mr. Clark, I feel sure that you will hear “I hr 1 kranians red
Walker was -till a prisone ! In telling ‘no protest from the Missouri Democrats ing Odessa
f the Germans" feeling over the arm- of this section. ’• | "Admiral Kolchak's
istice, h« states that the bigh German ------o——- -- . hren stopped.
--- from footlights to gallery. Now there
' In 1876 RUen Henrietta Richards, an I Copenhagen, March 25. — Former are frequently vacant seats.
p instructor in Massachusetts Institute of Emperor Charles of Austria-Hungary The long lines outside the popular
Technology, was elected to full mem-and his family left- Ekartsdu castle priced restnurants have disappeared
bership in the American Institute of Sunday evening on a special train for1 too and one can get a meal without (
Mining Engineers, living the first worn- । Switzerland, -a dispatch from Vienna ; fighting for it.
an thus honored says. - - | Theekodusison. , 1
nation by airplane to Moscow, the air-
plane being stolen. This was necessary
because the frontiers were closely
guarded and communication was im-
possible through the regular channels
it will take ten years for Bolshe-
vism to. take complete hold of all
the lengue is the fact that hox seats l"hiladelphin, March 25 The snper-
cnee. Home commentators in London
see the Hungarian situation a* partly
the result of the delay of the peace
eonferenee in bring, ng about a prelimi-
nary peace.
A report through Swjtzrrland to Paris
says that Karl Kautsky, an independent
gain the us** of his foot anil fully re-
covered.
German ) whs held in Berlin Sunday in front of.
THE INDUSTRIAL
CONGRES WILL
mEET INDALLAS---.... -IIUE UIIN R4RI1M
Dallas. Texas, March 25 J hr pro- Second, it to piai. that this week <" I IIIL Hull UHlHIV
gram nt the Texas Industrial Congreas the earning week may see some vetylun n n ninn ■ ■ I I IT
at its annual meeting in Duallas, Sat-iatartling eventa uo the inland it-eir. I I U K I U I N I M I I .H I
urday. March 29, to one of unusual J Things in England and Ireland are ini |1 I g)
interat, and speakers of prominegce | an awful state of unrest and dissatis-
both from withi and without the '
are|ment brfore starting on her maiden
of trip.
con- ' ‘ । y » • — —-
which he said was "worse than I wonle Kansas; Toni Wade, of Oklahoma and
_ stood there with "Od Ciory" flutter- I
qing in the breeze, the deughboys frit
|| i deeper appreciution of that wonder- ।
j | fill ring than they had ever experiene- nt which senator Bames A Reed wh weapons toward the restoration nt nor
6 rd before. On the other hand the old is oprsed to the prrw.nl dr iff of the m conrlitions in these countries
o-x----
he admonished suddenly . -"Two w eeks , Wilson.
the meeting the crowd went to the H •- ut once, according to the opinion today,
tri Adlon, where most of the entente reaching the peace eonference.
corumissioners in Berlin are quarterrd. \llied forces there are sadly ihnde-
Seeing American officers thry mistook qustr and rrinforcement must be im-
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Orange Daily Leader (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 15, No. 73, Ed. 1 Tuesday, March 25, 1919, newspaper, March 25, 1919; Orange, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1519409/m1/1/?q=Lamar+University: accessed June 6, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Lamar State College – Orange.